Affair with the back
A full-bodied treatment of a story of physical passion – and such stories, great ones even, are not lacking in our literature – is unthinkable on the Indian screen … The scenes of lovemaking in Indian films have therefore been reduced to a formula of clasping hands, longing looks, and vapid, supposedly amorous verbal exchanges – not to speak of love duets sung against artificial romantic backdrops. It is the dead weight of ultra-Victorian moral conventions which reduces the best of directors to taking refuge in these devices.
– Satyajit Ray, "The Odds against Us", Our Films, Their Films
To Ray's catalogue of those techniques used by Indian film directors to portray "physical passion", one may add a recent inclusion: the fetish for lingering on the woman's uncovered back. Women have long had an indirect relation to culture, as the Muse has traditionally been female. "Men are erotically stimulated by the opposite sex; painting was male; the nude became a female nude," noted feminist scholar Shulamith Firestone, while talking about the representation of heterosexual desire in art. Such sentiment is echoed by the British art critic John Berger: "Men act and women appear. Men look at women. Women watch themselves being looked at … The surveyor of woman in herself is male: the surveyed female."